In Re Nutritional Sourcing Corp.

398 B.R. 816, 2008 Bankr. LEXIS 3416, 2008 WL 5396491
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Delaware
DecidedDecember 23, 2008
Docket17-12602
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 398 B.R. 816 (In Re Nutritional Sourcing Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Nutritional Sourcing Corp., 398 B.R. 816, 2008 Bankr. LEXIS 3416, 2008 WL 5396491 (Del. 2008).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Peter J. WALSH, Bankruptcy Judge.

To: Counsel listed in the attached on Exhibit A

This opinion is with respect to Debtors’, Nutritional Sourcing Corporation (“NSC”), Pueblo International, LLC (“Pueblo”) and FLBN, LLC (“FLBN”), Joint Chapter 11 Plan of Liquidation filed on September 4, 2008 (the “Plan”). (Doc. # 1528.) A number of parties have filed objections to the Plan, including objections to the confirmation of the Plan. See, e.g., Doc. # 1629. At the confirmation hearing on October 14, 2008, Debtors and the Official Committee of Unsecured Creditors (the “Committee” and together with Debtors, the “Plan Proponents”) presented evidence in support of confirmation of the Plan. The objectors also presented evidence and cross examined the Plan Proponents’ witnesses. (Doc. # 1675, 1678.) For the reasons stated below, the Court will deny confirmation of the Plan.

BACKGROUND

NSC and its subsidiaries, Pueblo and FLBN, operated a chain of supermarkets in Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands. Debtors also operated a chain of in-home movie and game entertainment outlets in Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands through franchise rights with Blockbuster, Inc. (Doc. # 1499, p. 5.) On August 3, 2007, Debtors filed a voluntary petition for relief under chapter 11 of title 11 of the Bankruptcy Code, 11 U.S.C. §§ 101 et seq.

This is not the first bankruptcy proceeding for NSC; it filed for chapter 11 bankruptcy in 2002 and emerged from chapter 11 on June 5, 2003. (Case # 02-12550(PJW).) Pueblo and FLBN were not debtors in the 2002 bankruptcy case. However, NSC’s reorganization in that bankruptcy case impacted all Debtors and many of their creditors in the instant bankruptcy proceeding. An integral part of NSC’s 2003 reorganization was the issuance by NSC of Senior Secured Notes dated June 5, 2003. These Senior Secured Notes were issued in exchange for certain other Senior Secured Notes due August 1, 2003 (the “Old Senior Notes”). (Doc. # 1499, pp. 7-8.) According to the declaration of William T. Keon, III — -the CEO and President of each of the Debtors until his recent death — -which was filed in support of Debtors’ request for approval of the Plan, the holders of the Old Senior Notes requested that the Senior Secured Notes be supported by guarantees secured by a pledge of all of NSC’s subsidiaries. NSC resisted this request and instead the Restated Subordinated Intercompany Real Estate Note dated June 5, 2003 was executed by Pueblo in favor of NSC (the “Mirror Loan Note”). (Doc. # 1676, ¶ 24-26.) In brief, because NSC, as a holding company, does not have assets of its own to make payments on the Senior Secured Notes, the Mirror Loan Note provides for a transfer of funds from Pueblo to NSC *820 and is secured by certain of Pueblo’s real estate. (Doc. # 1715, p. 12.)

As noted by Keon in his declaration, in order to assure Pueblo’s trade creditors that they would be paid ahead of NSC’s creditors, a subordination provision was added to the Mirror Loan Note. (Doc. # 1676, ¶ 27.) In particular, the Mirror Loan Note provides that payment is “subordinate to all claims of any trade creditors of [Pueblo].” (Doc. # 1676, ex. A, p. 2 (emphasis added)). Thus, by its terms, the Mirror Loan Note cannot be paid until all claims of any trade creditor of Pueblo are paid in full.

The Mirror Loan Note does not include a definition of “trade creditor,” nor does the Senior Note Indenture executed in connection with the Senior Secured Notes and the Mirror Loan Note. The instant objections to the Plan stem from this lack of definition of trade creditor in the Mirror Loan Note and its subsequent defining in the Plan. The Mirror Loan Note is governed by New York law. (Id. at ex. A, p. 8.)

NSC’s public filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) demonstrate that the term “trade creditor” continued to remain undefined in relation to the Mirror Loan Note following the execution of the Mirror Loan Note. Specifically, (1) NSC’s Annual Report (Form 10-K) for the year ended November 2, 2002, (2) NSC’s Form 10-K for the year ended November 1, 2003, (3) NSC’s Form 10-K for the year ended October 30, 2004, and (4) NCS’s Form 10-K for the year ended October 29, 2005 include references to the Mirror Loan Note and/or discuss the subordination provision therein. Each of NCS’s 10-Ks contain language similar to the following regarding the Mirror Loan Note: “The inter-company notes[, including the Mirror Loan Note,] are subordinated to the obligations of the subsidiaries under the May 2003 Bank Agreement and to the trade creditors of Pueblo.” Nutritional Sourcing Corporation, Annual Report (Form 10-K), at Part I, Item 7, “Liquidity and Capital Resources” (Dec. 23, 2004) (emphasis added). Also, NSC’s Form 10-K notes that “as NSC is a holding company, indebtedness at the NSC level is effectively subordinated to indebtedness and other obligations at the operating subsidiary level.” Id. at Part I, Item 1: “The Company is Highly Leveraged.”

Despite the lack of definition of the term “trade creditor” in the Mirror Loan Note, in his declaration, Keon explained that:

While defining the term “trade creditor” was not specifically discussed at the time of the issuance of the Senior Secured Notes, the primary concern was to ensure that providers of grocery and other merchandise for resale to Pueblo, including any related shipping costs, would be paid ahead of the claims of NSC’s creditors. Without trade credit from providers of grocery and other merchandise for resale, Pueblo would have encountered significant operating difficulties. These providers were very concerned about how Puéblo was to operate and meet its obligations to them once NSC emerged from its prior chapter 11 case in 2003.

(Doc. # 1676, ¶ 28 (emphasis added)). In his testimony on October 14, 2008, Keon added that Debtors did not have as urgent concerns about “non-trade creditors”—creditors who did not provide grocery and other merchandise for resale to Pueblo— as the goods and services those creditors provided were not perceived to be as important to Debtors’ continued business operations. (Doc. # 1700, 103:5-21; see also Doc. # 1715, p. 16.)

In addition to the Senior Secured Notes and the Mirror Loan Note, Debtors’ pre-petition capital structure included an *821 Amended and Restated Loan and Security Agreement dated as of January 28, 2005 between NSC as guarantor, and Pueblo and FLBN as borrowers, with Western-bank Puerto Rico (the “Loan and Security Agreement”); it is secured by first priority hens on substantially all of Debtors’ assets. (Doc. # 1499, p. 6.) Debtors’ obligations as of the current bankruptcy filing’s petition date were approximately $95 million under the Loan and Security Agreement, approximately $37 million under the Senior Secured Notes, and approximately $37 million under the Mirror Loan Note. (Id. at pp. 7-8.) The Loan and Security Agreement $95 million obligation was paid in full following Debtors’ sale of substantially all of their going concern assets.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
398 B.R. 816, 2008 Bankr. LEXIS 3416, 2008 WL 5396491, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-nutritional-sourcing-corp-deb-2008.